The following are the four poems originally published on pages 108 - 111 of Issue 28.4.
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FOUR SONNETS
by
Susan Telfer
Tide Pool
My desire is to squat by the tide pool,
Teeming with purple, blue, acid-green life.
I want to wait all day in the hot sun,
Trying to catch bullheads in my bare hands.
I want to pick up the pin-cushioned
Sea urchin, caress the soft pink cervix
Of sea anemone and be pulled in.
Starfish heap over one another.
I want to find sea slugs, their long penile
Gooiness drooping from low rocks, hiding.
Turn over rock after rock to find crabs,
Flip them over, check bellies for their sex.
I long for such salty, simple, luscious
Days, as deep inside me basks a scream.
Witch Hazel
Go see the bank where the witch hazel swells,
Its intense yellow and tainted red fronds
Curling in Januarys chilling wind,
Reaching downtown toward desolate ground.
Even pussy willows wear their red caps.
But witch hazels bloom, her banished desire,
Dazzles dark yews, like dancing pink tendrils
Of sea anemone in front of oozy
Foliage in summer tide pools, kissing
My finger, sucking it in when I touch.
Go see the stark winter blooms, you urge me.
But wandering this front yard, I am cold,
Hearing our dog rustling damp viburnums;
Im a fool who needs permission to praise.
Black Bear
Like a dreamed black bear I have slept curled
In the north room, an unnoticed totem.
My mantra is "I dont know" and Im tired
Of not knowing. Im a yard of past ripe
Apple trees and frosted rose hips stolen
By alchemic bears in moonlight. I am rain
Shuddering in gutters. No one sees my
Desire running in this hot winter wind,
Or my mortal hibernating heart.
Like my dreamed bear arousing, I must wake,
Life half past, no baby clutching my bra.
I must forget I dont know what I need.
What scares me most sleeps wildly by my knee.
Who will it see when it wakes, looks at me?
Crows
One dark rain-sopped afternoon, the bold green
Front lawn is blanketed in a black cloak:
Shining, flapping, magical. The bare oak trees,
Too, fool-full of hundreds of crows. I watch
Their council of sentinels from the window.
But that day of rain, I am in a trance
Of the life I have outgrown, recalling
Safer hours folding clean, line-dried diapers.
Scared to slough off my wary enamel,
Scared to recoil, I have forgotten my plans.
I shuffle the archetype deck for clues:
Orphan, Student, Mother, Poet, Lover.
What is that unread winged message
Flooding the inbox of my yard this day?
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